Sarah Pickering : Explosions

Sarah Pickering : Explosions, Fires and Public Order

Sarah Pickering’s Explosions, Fires, and Public Order is a visually arresting glimpse into the secret world of civil defense by one of today’s up-and-coming artists.
Combining four series, Explosions, Fires, and Public Order begins with Public Order, a project exploring the Metropolitan Police Public Order Training Centre, a simulated urban (...)

The Power of the Invisible Sun

The Power of the Invisible Sun, de Bobby Sager

“The Power of the Invisible Sun”, Through his philanthropic work, Bobby Sager has come face to face with children living in some of the most war-torn areas of the world. His photographs capture their transcendent spirit : the power of the invisible sun.
These photographs taken in Afghanistan, Rwanda, Pakistan, Palestine, Sri Lanka, Kenya, and (...)

Lucky Looks

This photo reportage of Spain at the beginning of the 21st Century shows the diversely rich landscape of a country in continuous movement. A place with a restless history, a land like no other, full of renewed vitality as time passes. Bernadó’s look is defined by his geometric cleanliness, which extends from the lens to the world before him, (...)

American night

American night, de Miguel Oriola

Miguel Oriola is one of Spain’s most important photographers. During the 80s and 90s, he focused on fashion and advertising photography, but over the last years he has been exploring very personal and risky works. In this collection of photos, Oriola captures an American night. In the darkness of the night, strange creatures come out of their (...)

Public Photographic Spaces

Public Photographic Spaces: Propaganda Exhibitions from Pressa to the Family of Man, 1928-1955

This book focuses from a chronological perspective on photography as a tool for a new visuality and the rupture of the role of the spectator: photographic exhibitions from 1928 to 1955, from the spaces designed by Lissitzky’s to The Family of Man; the trajectory of utopian architectural-photographic space and from post-Revolutionary Russia to (...)

Capitolio

Capitolio, de Christopher Anderson

Capitolio is a cinematic journey through the shadows of Caracas, Venezuela during “revolution”. In the tradition of William Kelin’s New York and Robert Frank’s The Americans, Magnum photographer Christopher Anderson creates an emotional portrait of a time and a place that is ripping apart at the seams. Rather than a didactic or journalistic (...)